Thank you!!The houses I built until now, were all just "half houses" or had big holes in, so a big hand could move the miniatures inside. With the removable floors I thought I could finally build houses that look more like complete houses.On saturday next week my two friends and I play again and I think I will use this house on our playfield though it is not finished just to see if it works in the way I was thinking of...

That's a terrific house with all the ornaments, the chimney and such. Maybe I'll try my hand on Styrodur. How much does it cost at a regular german Baumarkt? Can this be painted with an airbrush or does it have to be done by hand?

Thank you, Grimscull!! All the Styrodur I have, I got from a friend and my father-in-law. So I have no idea, what it costs. In an other forum I read that the Styrodur from sansys.de should be good. I will paint my house by hand. A few barrels I made out of that Styrodur could be painted without problems.

Last edited by Dragonhunter on Wed 11 Nov 2015 - 13:43; edited 1 time in total

I like the house!But I think the timber and the stones can be more structure. In different stones 1 or 2 corners press deeper. Then the wall is not straight. With a real stone (rough, broken surface) or aluminum foil/staniol-paper (ball) press/ roles on the surface of the styrodur for more structure.It looks good. And is easier to paint.

@ GrimscullStyrodur you can buy in every "Baumarkt". From approx 3€/ plate (2cm). To ca 13€/ 10cm. I believe that building materials trade is cheaper.Questions on residues on construction sites or companies. There is often a gift.Airbrush is no problem.

Thank you too, IngoisT!!And thank you for your suggestions. With the real timber I really was too lazy to cut some structure in it. But in the stones I tried to change the surface. You maybe cannot see it really good in my pictures, but in the stones I cut off some corners, impressed some single stones and the idea with the aluminium ball I already used!

Thank you!! I am curious how it all will look painted, since the beams out of balsa look different to the carved ones (just like IngoisT said).

But since this is my first house out of Styrodur, I see it a little bit as a test-piece, too. So I can find out, what I can do better with the next one. But still there will be surely both types of beams. ;-) But hopefully they will look more similar that time! :-)

Hi.Here's what I have done for the last days on my house.However, I started with the ground floor, because I wanted to glue the stairs and the chimney to the walls for the battle we had last saturday.Until now there is not much dirt on the walls and the house has no base.I want this to be the first house for the game board I have planned.Though I don't know, whether I will ever build it, I will leave this things away for now, so I can add them appropriate later on.Upon the planks on the roof, I will add shingles, when I have them all glued on.

One thing I will change on my next house is, that I have to find a way to make the real beams look more like those I carved in the Styrodur.Since I have no wire brush, I will find out, what I can do with my Dremel and an attachment.

DeafNala :My older houses were completely made out of corrugated cardboard with continuous floors out of it and just some planks out of paperboard on them. That always looked too "concreted" to me.So this time, I wanted to make some more realistic floors even though it would be more complex.

Von Kurst :I already have a Dremel. That's why I mentioned it. But you are right... I should buy a wire brush!! Especially to disturb my wife a little less... ;-)What I can tell from the games last saturday :The removable floors are a good idea, but not, if you have three or more Skaven stand in the attic and you always have to remove them, to get to your Orks in the middle or ground section... ;-)

Yeah, we have the same issue. We tend to stack the upper floors to the side to ease the removing each floor issue. It doesn't look as good in photos, but it speeds things up. Setting the game in Araby or the Karribean means that most roofs are flat, which makes setting an upper story aside easier.

I have some houses with removable floors only (the walls are still attached, you reach in and take out floors while trying not to knock over or move models on the floor being removed), those are a real pain. Actually I think I only have one of those left and no one ever goes to that interior room anymore...